P986:4, 90:1.1
The shaman was the ranking medicine man, the ceremonial
fetishman, and the
focus personality for all the practices of evolutionary religion. In many
groups the shaman
outranked the war chief, marking the beginning of the church
domination of the state. The shaman sometimes functioned as a priest and even
as a
priest-king. Some of the later tribes had both the earlier
shaman-medicine
men (seers) and the later appearing
shaman-priests. And in many cases the
office of shaman became hereditary.
P986:5, 90:1.2
Since in olden times anything abnormal was ascribed to spirit possession,
any striking mental or physical
abnormality constituted qualification for
being a medicine man. Many of these men were epileptic, many of the women
hysteric, and these two types accounted for a good deal of ancient inspiration
as well as spirit and devil possession. Quite a few of these earliest of priests
were of a class which has since been denominated
paranoiac.
P987:1, 90:1.3
While they may have practiced deception in minor matters, the great majority
of the shamans believed in the fact of their spirit possession. Women who
were able to throw themselves into a trance or a cataleptic fit became powerful
shamanesses; later, such women became prophets and spirit mediums. Their cataleptic
trances usually involved alleged communications with the ghosts of the dead.
Many female shamans were also professional dancers.
P987:2, 90:1.4
But not all shamans were self-deceived; many were shrewd and able tricksters.
As the profession developed, a
novice was required to serve an apprenticeship
of ten years of hardship and self-denial to qualify as a medicine man. The
shamans developed a professional mode of dress and affected a mysterious conduct.
They frequently employed drugs to induce certain physical states which would
impress and mystify the tribesmen.
Sleight-of-hand feats were regarded as
supernatural by the common folk, and
ventriloquism was first used by shrewd
priests. Many of the olden shamans unwittingly stumbled onto
hypnotism; others
induced
autohypnosis by prolonged
staring at their
navels.
P987:3, 90:1.5
While many resorted to these tricks and deceptions, their reputation as a
class, after all, stood on apparent achievement. When a shaman failed in his
undertakings, if he could not advance a plausible
alibi, he was either
demoted
or killed. Thus the honest shamans early perished; only the shrewd actors
survived.
P987:4, 90:1.6
It was shamanism that took the exclusive direction of tribal affairs out of
the hands of the old and the strong and lodged it in the hands of the shrewd,
the clever, and the farsighted.